Top Banner
class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills
29
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

class 3: 09/14/09building research skills

Page 2: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

research

Page 3: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

the 3 levels of seeing

• All there is to thinking [doing research],” he said, “is seeing something noticeable which makes you see something you weren’t noticing which makes you see something that isn’t even visible.” (Norman Maclean, 1976, p. 92)

Page 4: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• the immediately visible• that which is visible but noticeable

only to the careful observer• the invisible or the unobservable

Page 5: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

all researchers must attend to:• precision and accuracy

– precision: exactness of description– accuracy: extent to which we are

describing what we say we are describing

• bias and efficiency– bias: systematic error in description– efficiency: maximizing the

information gathered

Page 6: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• the observation “n” problem– how many observations do I need

• cost/risk– will my research put someone at-

risk or cost someone• resources and constraints

– how much time, money etc. do I have

• including relevant factors and excluding irrelevant factors– am I observing the right things

Page 7: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• framing research questions– There is no such thing as a

logical method of having new ideas….Discovery contains “an irrational element,” or a “creative intuition.” (Karl Popper)

• building models– a narrative that explains one’s

observations

Page 8: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• evaluating models– does this model adequately

explain new observations– does this model explain

observations better than other models

Page 9: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

constructing a model1. hypothesize the factors involved2. hypothesize how they might be related3. draw the models4. evaluate which one explains the facts

best5. guesstimate the strengths of pathsrules• model must be falsifiable• maximize concreteness• explain as much as possible

Page 10: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

Krathwohl: ch 6 the literature review

• goals: see page 103• getting started:

– existing reviews– AERA (and other) programs– key articles’ references– people familiar with the area– ERIC

Page 11: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• terms•controlled vocabulary•keyword indexing•citation indexing

• copy Table 6.1 and keep it in a notebook

• copy General Suggestions (p. 121) and keep

Page 12: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

Vogt• aggregate data• applied research• case study• control for• dummy variable (first paragraph)• ecological fallacy• emic, etic• endogenous, exogenous• experiment (first & third

paragraph)• gambler’s fallacy

Page 13: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

ethics

Page 14: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

Sieber: Ch 3

• general ethical principles– beneficence– respect– justice

Page 15: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• six norms– valid design– competence of researcher– identification of consequences– selection of subjects– voluntary informed consent– compensation for injury

Page 16: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

writingwriting

Page 17: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

quotationsfewer than 40 words• Price (1982) wrote, “Interventionists make efforts

to teach and typically do expect mastery, whereas anti-interventionists avoid teaching what they perceive as difficult, because they fear that children will be harmed by unreasonable expectations for mastery” (p. 282).

• Price (1982) wrote that “interventionists make efforts to teach and typically do expect mastery, whereas anti-interventionists avoid teaching what they perceive as difficult, because they fear that children will be harmed by unreasonable expectations for mastery” (p. 282).

Page 18: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

more than 40 words• Ayers (1993) observed,

We experience our own culture from the deepest levels toward the surface, and so our own culture can be largely invisible to us. . . . When we look at another culture, however, we tend to see the surface first, and we may fail to probe toward the deeper well-springs of meaning. This, too, can cut us off, and make culture and other people invisible. (p. 79)

Page 19: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

grad lifegrad life

Page 20: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

Wildavsky: The Organization of Time

• honor the sabbath: have an inviolable day off

• do not do for yourself what others can do for you

• spend money to buy time• play when you play but work when

you work• learn to fill up the small fragments

of time

Page 21: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• organize the flow of your work: avoid waiting to work

• avoid downtime: plan ahead• keep yourself supplied with work• control your schedule: get small

things done ahead of time• have a rule to have rules• if you can’t think of what to do

with something, throw it away

Page 22: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• defend your work time, but don’t be a workaholic

• keep conversations with students businesslike

• keep things short• be careful about taking on new

obligations• efficient use of time makes it easier

to let go

Page 23: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

more top 10 tips

• read Graduate Programs Handbook (your advisor may be a little out of date)

• get to know the grad programs secretary in your department and treat her well

• develop friendships with grad students in other departments and colleges

Page 24: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• find a special place somewhere on campus where you can work uninterrupted (hint: it probably won’t be your office)

• point every paper you write toward your dissertation

• take advantage of being a student—go to games (except for football and men’s basketball, all are free with student ID)

Page 25: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• work out regularly—get exercise• maintain a life and passion outside

of grad school, e.g., read novels, listen to music, dance, skate, play music, join a club

• do graduate school—don’t let graduate school do you

Page 26: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

good resources• Chronicle of Higher Education

– academe’s job ads– available on line:

•www.chronicle.com–user name: uiuclib–password: library

• Tomorrow’s Professor– https://mailman.stanford.edu

/mailman/ listinfo/tomorrows-professor/

• Google Scholar (scholar.google.com)

Page 27: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

best quick getaways

• Krannert Art Museum (2 minutes)• Carle Park (Urbana: Iowa St. 3 blks

east of Lincoln—15 minute walk)• Hessel Park (Champaign: Kirby St. 4

blks west of Neil—25 minute walk)• Meadowbrook Park (Urbana:

Windsor east of Race—short bike ride)

Page 28: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

• Lake of the Woods (Mahomet—15 minute drive, west on 74)

• Salt Fork River Preserve (Homer Lake) (17 miles east of Urbana)

• Allerton (southeast of Monticello—30 minute drive)

Page 29: Class 3: 09/14/09 building research skills. research.

free (or cheap) stuff this week(under construction)